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Kenny wants to know how he can listen to TWIT Live using the Amazon Echo and the Sonos One? Leo says there is a skill for it, but not everything Echo does works on the Sonos One. It may be the word choice. Try "Echo, Play TWIT on TuneIn with my Sonos" or something to that effect.

James has had it with cable and wants get rid of it and stream. Leo says for most people, the best choice is to get broadband from the cable company, and then get TV from something like YouTube TV or Sling TV. The other choice is DSL, but there will be varying degrees of success depending on how far away from the main hub one is. With DSL, it slows down the farther one is away. Fiber is the other choice, and may be the best solution of all. But its coverage is spotty. High speed wireless is coming and once that hits, one can completely cut the cable.

Gary needs a new TV and wants to cut the cord. Rich suggests checking out Untangle.tv. It will walk him through the process of cord cutting and recommend streaming services based on what he wants to watch. He will have to keep his internet service to stream it, however. And for some channels, he may need an antenna, and it comes down to where he lives on whether or not that will be practical. He'll need line of sight to the broadcast antennas. AntennaWeb.org can help there too.

Jerry wants to know if he can bypass local stations and still get network programming. Rich says networks are all setup to route through the local station. He can't really get a raw feed that bypasses it.

Anthony wants to know what the advantage is of getting an Apple TV if all the modern TVs are so-called "smart" TVs? Rich says that apps are always better, and updated more on a dedicated device like the Apple TV. Smart TVs, on the other hand, rarely get updated, if ever. TV makers are in the TV business, not the app development business. So Apple TV has that advantage.

Jeannie has had it with her cable subscription and is going to become a cord cutter. She's got an antenna and the Amazon Fire Stick, but how can she replace her DVR capability? Rich says that SlingTV has a cloud DVR option built into their service for an additional $5 a month. They also have a device called the AirTV Player for about $50.

Ed wants to know how he can save YouTube videos. Leo says that there are plenty of third party sites, like KeepVid, that can do it. But it doesn't work with all videos. If he puts the letters "pp" after YouTube in the URL, it'll download the video by adding a download button. So he just will need to go to YouTubePP.com/videoaddress. It's web based, but it should do the trick.

Roger is a cord cutter, who uses an antenna to watch live television. He's just at the edge of the range and sometimes the signal drops out. He decided to go with DirecTV Now and there's still no local channels. Leo says it depends on where he is. Roger's DSL line shows that he's 75 miles away from he actually is, and so DirecTV Now won't give him local channels. Leo says IP Geo location is notoriously inaccurate, at most a best guess. Leo says that AT&T needs to fix that, because they're using a lousy IP location service.

Ezekiel has a leftover phone that he uses as an mp3 player. It isn't activated and all he can use it for is an mp3 player. Leo says that even if users haven't activated it, they can still connect via WiFi. And they can also download it. At the least, I Heart Radio is caching the show while Ezekiel is listening to it, making it local to his device.

Alan has a Roku Ultra, and after a month, it's starting to get out of sync, and it doesn't matter what app he's using. The video speeds up, but the audio stays the same. Alan has called Roku and they said to remove the apps and reinstall them. Unfortunately, it didn't fix the problem. Leo has a hunch it's a defective Roku device. Leo would demand they replace it. It may be a bandwidth issue, but Leo isn't convinced.